YouTube
is cracking down on extremist content - and researchers and
journalists are getting caught in the crossfire.

Open-source researcher Eliot Higgins says he has had his old
videos about Syria deleted and his account was suspended as the
Google-owned video platform attempts to tackle material that
supports terrorism.

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Middle East Eye reports that Syrian opposition news site
Orient News was also deleted, as was a video uploaded by one of
the publication's own journalists.

"YouTube has now suspended my account because of videos of Syria
I uploaded 2-3 years ago. Nice anti-ISIS AI you've got there,
YouTube," Higgins tweeted on Saturday. "Ironically, by deleting
years old opposition channels YouTube is doing more damage to
Syrian history than ISIS could ever hope to achieve."

In another incident, a video from American journalist Alexa
O'Brien's video that was used in Chelsea Manning's trial was
deleted, according to Middle East Eye.

A Google spokesperson did not immediately respond to Business
Insider's request for comment.

At the start of August,
YouTube published a blog post discussing its new efforts to
fight "terrorist content" on its platform, including "better
detection and faster removal driven by machine learning." It
wrote that "the accuracy of our systems has improved dramatically
due to our machine learning technology. While these tools aren't
perfect, and aren't right for every setting, in many cases our
systems have proven more accurate than humans at flagging videos
that need to be removed."

But Higgins (who has since been unsuspended) has been
harshly critical of the efforts, tweeting: "So far YouTube's
attempts to remove ISIS and Jihadi content has proven to be a
total flop, loads of false positives. YouTube's new anti ISIS AI
has also shut down multiple channels with years of videos from
Syria, irreplaceable documentation of the conflict."